The Gamble House, designed by Charles and Henry Greene, in Pasadena, Calif.

Mr. Exuberance

Together they attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) School of Architecture (Cambridge) and left without graduating in 1891. In 1893 they joined their parents in Pasadena (Calif.), where, in 1894, the brothers established a partnership. The Greenes experimented in various styles but continually sought more direct, simple architectural forms to suit southern California. Their solution was the bungalow, with its interpenetration of interior and exterior space, emphasizing close contact with nature and the use of local materials and crafts.

Side chair, Honduras mahogany and ebony with inlay of silver, abalone, copper, pewter, and exotic …

The handful of elaborate houses that the Greene brothers built in Pasadena from 1904 to 1911 feature broad, overhanging eaves, prominent sleeping porches, and a frank utilization of wooden members (“sticks”) for exterior decorative effect. Wood, exquisitely worked and finished, figured prominently in these houses. The bungalow style that was developed by Greene and Greene soon influenced the design of countless smaller bungalows. From 1914, however, the Greenes’ own practice declined.

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single-storied house with a sloping roof, usually small and often surrounded by a veranda. The name derives from a Hindi word meaning “a house in the Bengali style” and came into English during the era of the British administration of India. In Great Britain the name became a derisive...